Kerry Michael O'Brien (born 27 August 1945) is an Australian journalist based in Byron Bay. He is the former editor and host of The 7.30 Report and Four Corners on the ABC. O'Brien is one of Australia's most respected journalists, having been awarded six Walkley Awards during his career.

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Kerry O'Brien was born into a Catholic family in Brisbane, Queensland, where he attended St Laurence's College.[1] He started as a news cadet at Channel 9 in Brisbane in 1966. He has worked in newspapers, wire service and television news and current affairs, as a general reporter, feature writer, political and foreign correspondent, interviewer and compere, and served as press secretary to Labor LeaderGough Whitlam.[2]

O'Brien said: "I guess it was my curiosity that drove my attraction to political journalism—and drove my desire to work for Gough Whitlam when that opportunity came up—because I wanted to see what it was like behind the scenes. I wanted to see what it was like to be a part of the process, rather than just reporting on it. When I came back to journalism, I realised that the experience I'd had in the back rooms of politics was like gold for me—in terms of being able to understand and second guess what was really going on behind that sort of opaque screen that the political processes, the processes of government throw up."[3]

With respect to effective interviewing, O'Brien revealed: "It’s very much about being prepared. Think through the issues related to what you’re talking about—think them through. Look for the logic. Try to understand as best you can, then you try and cut to the heart of the issue in the same way, I suppose, a lawyer might."[5]

O'Brien announced in September 2010 that he would be resigning as the editor and presenter of The 7.30 Report at the end of the year, and would move on to new roles within ABC in 2011.[6][7] He concluded his time at The 7.30 Report on 9 December.[8]

During his career as a journalist, O'Brien has won six Walkley Awards for his journalistic work.[12] His first two awards came in 1982, when he won the award for the best television current affairs report and the ceremony's top prize, the Gold Walkley. He again received prizes in 1991 and 2000. In 2010—his final year on The 7.30 Report—he received two awards: one for broadcast interviewing, and the other for journalism leadership.[8]

O'Brien, the son of university-educated hospital administrator, says that in his head his youth was "working class".[15] Educated by the Christian Brothers, he became a non-believer in his mid-20s, but said in 2015: "I don't regret the Catholic culture I was exposed to in terms of social justice and basic fairness, that sense of all people being born equal."[16] O'Brien worked as press secretary to the sacked Labor Prime Minister Gough Whitlam in 1977, while Whitlam was Opposition Leader. After Whitlam lost the 1977 Election, O'Brien worked for Deputy Labor leader Lionel Bowen.[17]

From various of his own interviews Obrien says: of South African President Nelson Mandela: "To be close to that kind of greatness, I would regard as a privilege." He describes US President Obama as having a "generous nature", former Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev as "impressive", and British Conservative Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher as "looking down her nose at you". In 1988, Thatcher terminated an interview with O'Brien and, by O'Brien's account: "She hissed, 'You just had to go too far.'"[18]

Former conservative Liberal Prime Minister John Howard wrote in his autobiography Lazarus Rising that, "the politics of Kerry O'Brien, presenter of the ABC's 7.30 Report were a mile away from mine. Yet I appeared regularly on his program, because it was a serious current affairs presentation...".[19] Of the 1996 prime ministerial Election debates, Howard wrote: "I flatly refused to have Kerry O'Brien of the ABC [moderate the debates] because of the way he had handled the second Keating-Hewson debate in 1993" (in which, Howard wrote, O'Brien "went in to bat" for Keating).[20]

O'Brien opposed the Howard Government's budget cuts to the ABC, and said the appointment of John Shier as its Managing Director was a manifestation of the "conservative obsession with the ABC as a kind of biased, left-wing culture".[21]

After retiring from the 7.30 Report, O'Brien presented the 2013 ABC series, Keating: the Interviews from which he wrote a biography of former Labor Prime Minister Paul Keating, who co-operated with O'Brien, rather than write an autobiography.[22][23]

O'Brien welcomed the replacement of Liberal Prime Minister Tony Abbott by the less conservative Malcolm Turnbull in 2015, telling Fairfax that it was "a little burst of sunlight nationally..." and that "There's a surge of relief because things were so bad"[24]